About 82% of New York state voters said they favor term limits, according to the Siena College poll. Voters appear less certain about the prospect of a full-time legislature, with about 54% saying they would support the idea, and 42% saying they oppose it. The poll asked voters if they would support a full-time legislature and prohibit legislators from having outside jobs, “while increasing their salary accordingly.”

Gov. Andrew Cuomo has said he does not personally support legislative term limits, but has acknowledged that he would raise the idea in discussions during his efforts to find legislative solutions to address corruption in the capital.

Cuomo has proposed repealing the Wilson-Pakula provision of state election law, which allows politicians to run on multiple ballot lines with the permission of party leaders, and about 55% of respondents in the Siena poll said they favor limiting candidates to one party line. About 40% of voters said they oppose this idea. New York state Sen. Malcolm Smith, a Democrat who was arrested in a corruption probe along with five others earlier this month, was charged with allegedly trying to bribe Republican officials for a spot on the GOP line of the New York City mayoral ballot this fall. The defendants have all denied wrongdoing.

As for the officials best fit to attempt to clean up Albany, 29% of voters chose federal prosecutors, while 27% chose Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. About 18% chose Cuomo. District attorneys and the legislature were each chosen by 10% of voters.

“When it comes to who should take the lead in trying to clean up the corruption, voters think it should be federal prosecutors or Schneiderman,” Siena College pollster Steven Greenberg said in a statement. “Surprisingly, local district attorneys are not seen as any better leading the effort than is the Legislature itself, and Cuomo falls somewhere in the middle.”